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41,806,300 | comment | justahuman74 | 2024-10-11T04:55:51 | null | Yes, please only rent instead<p>- sincerely, all of the cloud providers | null | null | 41,805,550 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,301 | comment | nielsbot | 2024-10-11T04:56:13 | null | Does TS make JS non-smalltalky? Static typing which is optional.. and you still get a REPL, online compiler and the ability to dynamically inspect objects in your global object... | null | null | 41,806,277 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,302 | story | saidhasyim | 2024-10-11T04:56:42 | Show HN: 31Trace–monitor book/business/app reviews | - Monitor store's reviews on Google Map, Trip Advisor, Yelp, TrustPilot.
- Monitor book's reviews on Amazon, Apple, Audible, Goodreads, Google Play, Kobo, Scribd, Barnes and Noble, StoryGraph.
- Monitor app reviews on Google Play and Apple App Store.<p>The list is continuously growing. | https://www.31trace.com/ | 1 | null | 41,806,302 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,303 | comment | _nalply | 2024-10-11T04:56:45 | null | Different use cases. An ordered map shines if you need some ordering of keys. One use case is an ordered index, for example if you have an age index and need to list only adult people. A hashmap won't work here, I think.<p>So just use a DBMS, but if you don't want, perhaps this ordered concurrent map. | null | null | 41,803,771 | 41,798,475 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,304 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T04:56:46 | null | null | null | null | 41,806,240 | 41,805,706 | null | null | true | null |
41,806,305 | story | thunderbong | 2024-10-11T04:56:51 | Marcus vs. Search Warrant | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_v._Search_Warrant | 1 | null | 41,806,305 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,306 | comment | binary132 | 2024-10-11T04:57:15 | null | American politics is extremely wrapped up in identity and always has been. That means that having an opinion which someone disagrees with isn’t just an opinion they disagree with; in their mind it may be perceived as an opinion about who and what they or their loved ones are, and what should be done to or about them. Maybe I’m presuming here, but something tells me it’s not really like that in the gentleman’s hometown from the article. In America, people who disagree about politics feel like (or are) actual enemies, not fellow countrymen. We also do often place a lot of value on few precious friendships that we’re willing to mutually set aside the fighting and defensiveness for, and for the sake of getting along. I’m not sure that’s hard to explain or understand, and I’m not sure it has so much to do with density. | null | null | 41,804,460 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,307 | comment | strken | 2024-10-11T04:57:20 | null | I think a lot of people genuinely believe that transwomen are grooming and raping children en masse, or at least trying to get into women's sport so they can win medals. The fact that this is both wrong and stupid and has no real non-circumstantial evidence does not stop them.<p>At some point people have to talk to each other, right? And that's where you have a discussion about how you don't think kids should go to the Folsom Street Fair either, but that you also don't think it's fair for a 39 year old transwoman not to be allowed onto the division F basketball team with her friends, and maybe you and your interlocutor both discover that the other side is a little more tolerable than you thought.<p>Edit: I didn't really explain that very well. What I mean is that neither extreme finds the opinions of the other extreme tolerable, and that this is the result of paying too much attention to the long tail extremes instead of the middle of the bell curve. | null | null | 41,804,928 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,308 | comment | sham1 | 2024-10-11T04:57:21 | null | In my opinion at least, having a way to bootstrap rustc and the rust ecosystem is quite nice, as more and more projects start using the language.<p>And having multiple bootstrapping methods just makes it nicer. Helps with efforts like those of GNU Guix and other similar projects[0] that want to be able to have proper provenance for packages. Could help mitigate certain classes of supply chain attacks. (Even if not eliminate them completely!)<p>[0]: <<a href="https://bootstrappable.org/" rel="nofollow">https://bootstrappable.org/</a>> | null | null | 41,806,085 | 41,805,288 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,309 | comment | y1n0 | 2024-10-11T04:57:26 | null | From what “first principles” are you thinking? | null | null | 41,805,960 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,310 | comment | WAT251922th | 2024-10-11T04:57:52 | null | [flagged] | null | null | 41,805,391 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | true |
41,806,311 | comment | tsimionescu | 2024-10-11T04:58:14 | null | Not in this way, not significantly. At worse, for each new loop through the array you have an extra cache miss. If the array is large enough, 10 extra cache misses will barely even be measurable.<p>It's only for small arrays actually that the cost of the loop infra and the extra cache miss per loop matters. | null | null | 41,800,848 | 41,769,275 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,312 | comment | olalonde | 2024-10-11T04:58:18 | null | Why would he be of interest to national security? He is possibly a rich dude, but beyond that? | null | null | 41,793,352 | 41,783,503 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,313 | comment | GeekyBear | 2024-10-11T04:58:43 | null | Crossover and Whisky run 32 bit PC games just fine. | null | null | 41,806,094 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,314 | comment | miki123211 | 2024-10-11T04:58:57 | null | > Also, magic links need to be designed so that I can login on my PC, and click the link on my phone, and be logged in on the PC.<p>No.<p>If magic links only log you in on the device you click them on, they prevent a lot of phishing attacks.<p>With a setup like that, there's literally no way to impersonate your website and steal user credentials.<p>This comes at a cost of making logins on public computers less secure, and which of these is more important should be weighed on a service-by-service basis.<p>A website for making presentations should obviously choose "more phishing and easier to use on public computers", a service for managing your employees' HR records should obviously choose the opposite. | null | null | 41,802,831 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,315 | comment | zero-sharp | 2024-10-11T04:59:35 | null | >one needs to be personally affected by an issue to speak out on it.<p>I don't think the poster is making that point. Did you see the response?<p>Look: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/reply?id=41805263&goto=item%3Fid%3D41804460%2341805263">https://news.ycombinator.com/reply?id=41805263&goto=item%3Fi...</a> | null | null | 41,806,148 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,316 | comment | y1n0 | 2024-10-11T04:59:35 | null | There are more 4k boundaries than 16k boundaries. The issue is code compiled for 4k boundaries running on a 16k system. | null | null | 41,806,211 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,317 | comment | kcrwfrd_ | 2024-10-11T04:59:40 | null | Payload is really nice: <a href="https://payloadcms.com">https://payloadcms.com</a> | null | null | 41,805,391 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,318 | comment | nmca | 2024-10-11T04:59:40 | null | I already get a driverless taxi a few times a week | null | null | 41,805,938 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,319 | comment | lazide | 2024-10-11T04:59:42 | null | I suspect tongue in cheek - but - this seems funny to analyze.<p>I found an estimate for a typical AA batteries energy content as 4 watt-hours. (14.4 kj).<p>Rounding the energy output from ‘the geysers’ to 6 Terawatt hours (6000 gigawatt hours), means 1.5 trillion AA batteries per year, every year.<p>That’s a lot of battery changes! In fact, if someone went around doing nothing but changing batteries, 1 per second, 12 hours a day, 365 days a year, they’d need a staff of approximately 100,000 of those people to keep up.<p>I can see why it was more economical to do what they’re doing. | null | null | 41,805,039 | 41,802,939 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,320 | comment | woile | 2024-10-11T04:59:54 | null | Reading the article pulls me back to the expanse. What a great show. I recall the authors wrote an article expressing how wrong they were to predict that Ceres had no water [0].<p>[0]: <a href="https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/dear-dawn-james-sa-corey-pays-tribute-nasa-ceres-mission" rel="nofollow">https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/dear-dawn...</a> | null | null | 41,760,971 | 41,760,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,321 | comment | kragen | 2024-10-11T04:59:54 | null | At this point you have seriously transgressed the boundaries of civility; having been informed that you had completely misinterpreted my previous comment, the least you could do is to apologize. Instead you are responding with sarcastic remarks apparently predicated on the same misinterpretation you've just been corrected on. You've exhausted the presumption of good faith. Probably even your initial comment was merely trolling. | null | null | 41,805,469 | 41,788,026 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,322 | story | matt_d | 2024-10-11T05:00:12 | The Conditional Syntax | null | https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3689746 | 1 | null | 41,806,322 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,323 | comment | bmicraft | 2024-10-11T05:00:22 | null | Someone might argue that for a speaker the sound is more important than efficiency or even price (per unit of power output) | null | null | 41,802,973 | 41,757,808 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,324 | comment | lazide | 2024-10-11T05:00:46 | null | Ack, any temperatures above the boiling point of water at STP is going to require pressurization. Autoclaves are low pressure compared to this system. | null | null | 41,804,534 | 41,802,939 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,325 | comment | wetpaws | 2024-10-11T05:00:49 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,803,134 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | true |
41,806,326 | comment | tsimionescu | 2024-10-11T05:00:53 | null | You're comparing apples and oranges. Of course modifying an array or copying it takes way more time than looping. The comparison was not about that, it's about one loop with 10 instructions VS 10 loops each with a single instruction, for the exact same instructions. | null | null | 41,800,790 | 41,769,275 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,327 | comment | kristopolous | 2024-10-11T05:01:15 | null | This sounds like bad news for the gpu renter farms. Am reading this right? | null | null | 41,805,446 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,328 | comment | paulddraper | 2024-10-11T05:01:29 | null | Optional types are the best.*<p>I can prototype, script, move fast. Then I can solidify, stabilize, collaborate.<p>* To get top performance, of course you'll need compiler, types, static dispatch. | null | null | 41,805,877 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41806436
] | null | null |
41,806,329 | comment | Yeul | 2024-10-11T05:01:35 | null | Somewhere in the 16th and 17th century economic power shifted from the South to the North.
Venice became Amsterdam.<p>Singapore has it's location- a politically stable enclave in South East Asia. Portugal is competing with the likes of Denmark and Germany. | null | null | 41,805,046 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,330 | comment | ranger_danger | 2024-10-11T05:01:49 | null | This appears to only support CUDA on nvidia. I'm curious why they didn't just expose /dev/nvidia-uvm as a socket and forward that over the network instead of hooking hundreds of functions (maybe it's not that simple and I just don't know). | null | null | 41,787,547 | 41,787,547 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,331 | comment | saturn8601 | 2024-10-11T05:01:53 | null | Thats technically where the tunnels come in. I'm not saying its a solved problem im just saying that this real problem has obviously been considered. | null | null | 41,806,044 | 41,805,515 | null | [
41806447
] | null | null |
41,806,332 | comment | binarynate | 2024-10-11T05:02:18 | null | It's ironic that the example he gives for driving across LA already has a fast train connection:<p>> People that live in LA, I mean try to get from Pasadena to El Segundo during rush hour. You can fly to another city faster than you get to crosstown LA. And you have to drive the whole way.<p>You can take the Metro A line from Pasadena, then transfer to the C line to get to El Segundo. No driving necessary. Musk sells cars, so of course he has a massive incentive to say more cars are the solution to peoples' transit woes. But it seems like throwing more cars at the problem will simply make traffic worse, and from my experience living in Chicago, the best solution to avoid traffic (and parking!) is to take an alternative mode of transit that can bypass it (e.g. train, bike, electric scooter). | null | null | 41,805,706 | 41,805,706 | null | [
41806365,
41806380
] | null | null |
41,806,333 | comment | morjom | 2024-10-11T05:02:21 | null | The Oldschool Runescape and Guild Wars wikis are still some of the best wikis I've experienced. Both of them are even implemented into the game. In GW1&2 you can just type /wiki <insert subject> and it'll open a browser tab to the wikipage.<p>In OSRS there's a button next to the minimap that you click on first and then on the subject and it opens the wikipage for it.<p>I wish Warframe would move to a osrswiki model. A theorycraft heavy game almost requires a good, performant wiki.<p>Somewhat recently Wowpedia moved away from fandom to wiki.gg, dunno yet if it'll be another fandom, we'll see. | null | null | 41,797,719 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,334 | comment | DoesntMatter22 | 2024-10-11T05:02:33 | null | I hate when people downplay TechEmpower. They are the best benchmarks going, and awesome because anyone can contribute and as you said there is a lot of learning that can be done there. | null | null | 41,800,795 | 41,792,304 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,335 | comment | wlesieutre | 2024-10-11T05:02:47 | null | Well there was the one on the falcon heavy test flight | null | null | 41,806,276 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,336 | comment | godelski | 2024-10-11T05:02:58 | null | <p><pre><code> > for some reason it seems you need the wrong theories to organize the empirical data
</code></pre>
There's a somewhat well known article on this by Isaac Asimov: the Relativity of Wrong<p>The scientific process is really misunderstood. People think you use it to find truth, but actually you use it to reject falsehoods. The consequence of this is that you narrow in on the truth so your goals look identical, but the distinction does matter (at least if you want to understand why that happens and why it's okay that science is wrong many times -- in fact, it's always wrong, but it gets less wrong (I'm certain there's a connection to that website and this well known saying).<p>He's well known for his Sci-Fi but he got a PhD in chemistry, taught himself astrophysics, and even published in the area. He even had written physics texts. I found Understanding Physics quite enjoyable when I was younger but yeah, it isn't the same level of complexity I saw while getting my degree, but it's not aimed at University students.<p>Anyways, I'm just saying, he's speaking as an insider and I do think this is something a lot more people should read.<p><a href="https://hermiene.net/essays-trans/relativity_of_wrong.html" rel="nofollow">https://hermiene.net/essays-trans/relativity_of_wrong.html</a><p>I believe there's a copy of Understanding Physics here but currently offline: <a href="https://archive.org/details/asimov-understanding-physics" rel="nofollow">https://archive.org/details/asimov-understanding-physics</a> | null | null | 41,804,729 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,337 | comment | lazide | 2024-10-11T05:03:10 | null | One reason may be contaminants. Most sewage water has a lot of salts, proteins, weird minerals, heavy metals, etc. in it which can cause cause significant corrosion and other issues even at room temperature.<p>However, most geothermal systems already have issues with lots of salts and minerals being pulled from the surrounding rock (even with in-Situ water), to the point that maintaining equipment when things are constantly trying to dissolve and/or crystallize in them is one of the dominant costs.<p>So as long as the water is treated enough it doesn’t ‘cook’ into a gelatinous mass when it hits the hot rocks, it probably isn’t making the problem any worse. | null | null | 41,804,467 | 41,802,939 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,338 | story | neduma | 2024-10-11T05:03:28 | Ask HN: What is on going with WordPress world? | null | null | 1 | null | 41,806,338 | 2 | [
41806429,
41806399
] | null | null |
41,806,339 | comment | adamc | 2024-10-11T05:03:31 | null | I think neuroscience will not replace psychology for the same reasons physics doesn't replace chemistry. In theory it might encompass it, but in practice it's a difficult way to get there, and therefore not the effective path. | null | null | 41,803,143 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,340 | comment | hi-v-rocknroll | 2024-10-11T05:03:40 | null | How did this not get more votes? About top ten fines of all time.<p>They got caught laundering drug money, allowing multi-million dollar cash deposits at local branches. | null | null | 41,801,655 | 41,801,655 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,341 | story | matt_d | 2024-10-11T05:03:58 | Fast and accurate approximation algorithms for computing floating point sqrt | null | https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11075-024-01932-7 | 1 | null | 41,806,341 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,342 | comment | jeroenvlek | 2024-10-11T05:04:00 | null | As a freelancer myself I go one step further and actually charge hourly rates. This granularity helps both with short workshops and fulltime projects because with the latter I'm often asked to work overtime or I have personal errands to run. Charging by the hour smooths this quite a lot. | null | null | 41,764,903 | 41,764,903 | null | [
41806456
] | null | null |
41,806,343 | comment | mikae1 | 2024-10-11T05:04:04 | null | My first thought too. | null | null | 41,806,298 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,344 | comment | iknowstuff | 2024-10-11T05:04:09 | null | <a href="https://skills.ai/tesla-car-prices-analysis/" rel="nofollow">https://skills.ai/tesla-car-prices-analysis/</a> 37k model 3 for a good chunk of time, especially given the inflation since initial announcement, and given the amount of features in the base version which you'd have to pay out the ass with other OEMs, is actually very good. | null | null | 41,806,270 | 41,805,706 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,806,345 | comment | mewc | 2024-10-11T05:05:13 | null | +1 to ghost. built in node, supports the standard stuff you'd expect and new school. | null | null | 41,805,391 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,346 | comment | hi-v-rocknroll | 2024-10-11T05:05:21 | null | Salt, mulch, barriers, and/or poisons like glyphosate. | null | null | 41,803,596 | 41,780,229 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,347 | comment | miki123211 | 2024-10-11T05:05:52 | null | Why did we need a new standard for this, exactly?<p>Couldn't we just make password managers pretend that they're a Jubikey or similar?<p>Is it that Jubikeys don't offer any extra (master password / biometric) authn, and hence are only suitable as a second factor, where password managers can be used as both? | null | null | 41,803,432 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,348 | story | fagnerbrack | 2024-10-11T05:06:18 | Reader Q&A: What does it mean to initialize an int in C++? | null | https://herbsutter.com/2024/08/07/reader-qa-what-does-it-mean-to-initialize-an-int/ | 1 | null | 41,806,348 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,349 | comment | hi-v-rocknroll | 2024-10-11T05:06:59 | null | C++ STL/Boost and/or Python probably already have such a beast that could be adapted/cannibalized for some use-cases. | null | null | 41,798,475 | 41,798,475 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,350 | comment | biztos | 2024-10-11T05:07:09 | null | Hold on.<p>Where are you finding $100 avocado toast? | null | null | 41,795,593 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,351 | comment | jaarse | 2024-10-11T05:07:45 | null | Because that isn’t different or new enough to get investors excited.<p>The point of this presentation was not to spell out technically how they are going to accomplish this. Agreed, a fleet of model 3s would work great.<p>The point of this presentation was to look like a cool visionary tech company that is going to change the world, to justify that your Market cap is now larger than EVERY OTHER MAJOR AUTOMAKER COMBINED!<p>Same reason the prototypes need to look like they were lifted from Blade Runner. | null | null | 41,805,778 | 41,805,706 | null | [
41806424
] | null | null |
41,806,352 | comment | mikae1 | 2024-10-11T05:07:52 | null | I wish more people came across <a href="https://getpublii.com" rel="nofollow">https://getpublii.com</a> as a middle ground between full-on SSG and a hosted CMS. It's so damn good at this point. | null | null | 41,806,173 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,353 | comment | svnt | 2024-10-11T05:07:52 | null | They claimed in the first study to control for income, but I wonder how effective that is when you are considering a household of people a majority of the time. The person who donates may not be the person with higher general intelligence or higher income; only someone in their household must have the characteristic. | null | null | 41,797,826 | 41,794,807 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,354 | comment | marsten | 2024-10-11T05:07:53 | null | The most interesting thing to me by far was the lack of a steering wheel on the Robocab.<p>Without manual controls, vague promises ("puffery"?) about autonomy won't drive vehicle sales as they do today across all Tesla's models. The Robocab as shown literally cannot function (or make a dime of revenue) until they've fully solved autonomy and have convinced regulators of the same. | null | null | 41,805,706 | 41,805,706 | null | [
41806430,
41806422
] | null | null |
41,806,355 | comment | BiteCode_dev | 2024-10-11T05:07:54 | null | Have an optional one is nice for python. Would suck to be forced to use it all the time. | null | null | 41,805,604 | 41,801,415 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,356 | comment | bufferoverflow | 2024-10-11T05:07:55 | null | "SpaceX package", not "SpaceX thrusters".<p>He was talking about compressed air thrusters to increase acceleration. It's a cool idea. Who knows, they might implement it. | null | null | 41,806,276 | 41,805,706 | null | [
41806374
] | null | null |
41,806,357 | comment | albertopv | 2024-10-11T05:08:32 | null | If you are still believing a word from that man you're delusional | null | null | 41,806,013 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,358 | comment | FreakLegion | 2024-10-11T05:08:42 | null | I think serjester was talking about PEP 692 for typing kwargs with TypedDicts. Your recipe is a bit different.<p>Pydantic is targeting other use cases. The point of TypedDicts is compile-time safety without run-time overhead. Pydantic is useful for a lot of things, but performance isn't exactly its strong suit (written as of 2.9.2, I was just revisiting it earlier this week).<p>Anyway, in the same spirit of function signature hacking, I've found the following useful for "inheriting" them:<p><pre><code> _T = TypeVar("_T", bound=Callable)
def inherit_signature(_function: _T) -> Callable[..., _T]:
return lambda f: f
# Requests for example has some long signatures (via typeshed).
class CustomSession(requests.Session):
@inherit_signature(requests.Session.post)
def post(self, url: str, *args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> requests.Response:
...
</code></pre>
And now for CustomSession.post the editor sees:<p><pre><code> def post(
self: Session,
url: str | bytes,
data: _Data | None = None,
json: Any | None = None,
*,
params: _Params | None = ...,
headers: _HeadersUpdateMapping | None = ...,
cookies: RequestsCookieJar | _TextMapping | None = ...,
files: _Files | None = ...,
auth: _Auth | None = ...,
timeout: _Timeout | None = ...,
allow_redirects: bool = ...,
proxies: _TextMapping | None = ...,
hooks: _HooksInput | None = ...,
stream: bool | None = ...,
verify: _Verify | None = ...,
cert: _Cert | None = ...
) -> Response</code></pre> | null | null | 41,805,730 | 41,801,415 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,359 | comment | haolez | 2024-10-11T05:08:48 | null | I read it on Kindle. It was good enough. The code formatting was normal. | null | null | 41,805,735 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,360 | comment | treflop | 2024-10-11T05:09:05 | null | With all due respect, it's not like your average person who drives all the time knows how their car works at all either. | null | null | 41,803,464 | 41,801,334 | null | [
41806412
] | null | null |
41,806,361 | comment | maximinus_thrax | 2024-10-11T05:09:22 | null | <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRitZlhL3OQ" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRitZlhL3OQ</a> - 6 years ago<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2aNJCsfrP0" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2aNJCsfrP0</a> - 10 years ago<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mITK3qaaHQ8" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mITK3qaaHQ8</a> - 4 years ago | null | null | 41,805,822 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,362 | comment | mikae1 | 2024-10-11T05:09:24 | null | <i>> Are there any graphical SSGs that non-technical users could run locally to generate a site and upload it to their web host?</i><p><a href="https://getpublii.com" rel="nofollow">https://getpublii.com</a> is amazing and it's strange it doesn't get more attention. | null | null | 41,805,914 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,363 | comment | adastra22 | 2024-10-11T05:09:25 | null | I would have no problem if it was a compiler for a kernel-specific variant or subset of the rust language, and only used for that project. That actually sounds like a good way of moving forward.<p>But they’re talking about making a second implantation for the purpose of quirks documentation and standardization. Rust doesn’t need that. | null | null | 41,806,185 | 41,805,288 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,364 | comment | BiteCode_dev | 2024-10-11T05:09:47 | null | TypedDict features are nice, but the syntax to declare it is aweful | null | null | 41,801,415 | 41,801,415 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,365 | comment | gorgoiler | 2024-10-11T05:09:48 | null | The meme version of this would be:<p><i>Musk</i>: Mom, can I have national infrastructure on which I can safely and reliably operate my semi autonomous vehicles?<p><i>Mom</i>: We have infrastructure at home.<p><i>The Infrastructure</i>: a rail network with communal seating, infrequent service, and a minimal set of fixed route options.<p>If, through the accidents of human history, we spend the next century repurposing highways as railroads for rubber tired carriages then I suppose that’s a good enough outcome. In the century after that maybe we’ll start to reclaim the highway land back, a la Dr Beeching’s shuttering of post war British railway infrastructure. | null | null | 41,806,332 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,366 | comment | albertopv | 2024-10-11T05:09:59 | null | Of course. Mine is just an example to explain that there are many ways to improve Windows performance | null | null | 41,795,649 | 41,788,557 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,367 | comment | qingcharles | 2024-10-11T05:10:34 | null | Plus the large plugin library. | null | null | 41,806,169 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,368 | comment | chronogram | 2024-10-11T05:10:44 | null | If you were able to make do with cheaper GPUs, then you didn't need FP64 so you didn't need H100s in the first place right? Then you made the right choice in buying a drill for your screw work instead of renting a jackhammer even if the jackhammer would've seemed cooler to you at the time. | null | null | 41,806,008 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,369 | comment | lxe | 2024-10-11T05:11:10 | null | Thanks. I put 37 actual proposals in here. | null | null | 41,805,905 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,370 | comment | gradschoolfail | 2024-10-11T05:11:23 | null | Morally speaking, is ((profit<->negative externality) <-> (speculation<->liquidity provision)) a tautology i could get any of u curious about?<p>It motivates a search for the mystical beast: Marxist financier!<p>(Not to mention elucidates the principle of intertwining (wrt scaling marxist-financing-in-itself))<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40603483">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40603483</a> | null | null | 41,784,729 | 41,780,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,371 | comment | hi-v-rocknroll | 2024-10-11T05:11:30 | null | I found one of the most fun CS-augmented stats courses gradually built a stats library bottom-up over the time period of the course using simple constructs to solve lab assignments. | null | null | 41,800,699 | 41,800,699 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,372 | comment | Zeetah | 2024-10-11T05:11:33 | null | Gataca,
Fifth element,
Memento | null | null | 41,803,780 | 41,803,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,373 | comment | Attach6156 | 2024-10-11T05:12:11 | null | And if they stop training right now their "moat" (which I think is only o1 as of today) would last a good 3 to 6 months lol, and then to the Wendy's it is. | null | null | 41,806,299 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,374 | comment | bagels | 2024-10-11T05:12:19 | null | No, he said it would fly, he really did.<p>Edit:
<a href="https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1005577738332172289" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1005577738332172289</a>
SpaceX option package for new Tesla Roadster will include ~10 small rocket thrusters arranged seamlessly around car. These rocket engines dramatically improve acceleration, top speed, braking & cornering. Maybe they will even allow a Tesla to fly …<p>I didn't want to spend the time to find the video where the flying bit was said more explicitly. | null | null | 41,806,356 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,375 | comment | citizenpaul | 2024-10-11T05:12:25 | null | >don't understand files and folder<p>It may not go over well but I don't think this is some generational thing. Its just plain pure laziness that has become epidemic.<p>>Joshua Drossman, ..the laundry basket where you have everything kind of together, and you’re just kind of pulling out what you need at any given time,” he says, attempting to describe his mental model.<p>>I try to be organized, but there’s a certain point where there are so many files that it kind of just became a hot mess<p>Yeah.....need I say more? Other than gross. I think those statements prove my point better than I can.<p>Like most on HN I'm extremely computer savvy and I've yet to find a way to avoid dealing with file/folder models and I've tried. All other ways fall apart no matter how "advanced" they are. Maybe it will change with LLMs but so far there is no way for the computer to anticipate what you do/don't want and organize for you. | null | null | 41,803,215 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,376 | comment | totallykvothe | 2024-10-11T05:12:43 | null | .NET/Java are only as performant as Go if you completely ignore memory usage and focus only on time. | null | null | 41,803,025 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,377 | story | jonbaer | 2024-10-11T05:12:44 | Behind the Product: NotebookLM [video] | null | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOyFpSW1Vls | 2 | null | 41,806,377 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,378 | comment | kombookcha | 2024-10-11T05:12:44 | null | I straight up do not believe that Optimus is capable of vacuuming a car unassisted without damaging itself, the car or the hoover. | null | null | 41,806,100 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,379 | comment | bufferoverflow | 2024-10-11T05:12:46 | null | Watch the latest FSD videos. It drives exactly like that. | null | null | 41,805,740 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,380 | comment | justahuman74 | 2024-10-11T05:12:47 | null | Trains are great<p>Unless you think LA should go London/NYC style and build a load of stations, there is still the problem of what to do if you're not near a station at the start or end.
If it involves a bus connection, people will just drive | null | null | 41,806,332 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,381 | comment | qingcharles | 2024-10-11T05:12:51 | null | I did what any regular (in)sane developer would do when faced with this type of problem: wrote my own from scratch...! | null | null | 41,805,391 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,382 | comment | solardev | 2024-10-11T05:12:56 | null | It seems like Astro is picking up a lot of the simpler use cases that Next used to serve. It's much simpler and doesn't have a lot of fancy bolts included, but a lot of sites don't really need them either...<p>I think Next + SSG jumpstarted a pretty cool revolution in web hosting, at least, where now you can easily use any of a dozen different frameworks and host them anywhere from Vercel to Netlify to Cloudflare Pages to an S3, etc.<p>These things come in cycles. Today's simple, elegant indie darling is tomorrow's bloated behemoth. Happens to everything from JS frameworks to browsers to entire ecosystems, in this case the Web itself.<p>I doubt anything we discuss today will still be relevant in ten years. Maybe not even five... | null | null | 41,801,279 | 41,801,279 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,383 | comment | svnt | 2024-10-11T05:13:26 | null | Yes, but that is the absence of evidence, commonly called on when the science hasn't been done.<p>If a theory/hypothesis remains not proven once the science has been repeatedly done in numerous attempts to prove it, very often it does mean it is wrong. | null | null | 41,799,851 | 41,794,807 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,384 | comment | saturn8601 | 2024-10-11T05:14:02 | null | Ehh I disagree, the main competition like the Mazda 3 has still been very competitive price wise and if you are comparing to the luxury brands then consider the fact that the car launched with a very stripped down interior compared to their competition and still remains that way while their competition have clearly continued to excel in this regard indicates that Tesla have hidden the inflation there.<p>But the problem with comparing "features" is that tesla fanboys/haters get to assign arbitrary values to the features the cars have. It would be so much easier to just meet your promised price point. In that regard my point still stands. | null | null | 41,806,344 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,385 | comment | dev_tty01 | 2024-10-11T05:14:22 | null | Or by a Waymo you can already use in a visit to SF? | null | null | 41,806,292 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,386 | comment | eriksencosta | 2024-10-11T05:14:28 | null | What do you think of this? <a href="https://github.com/eriksencosta/money/blob/enum-percentage-spike/money/src/test/kotlin/com/eriksencosta/money/DesignSpikes.kt#L13">https://github.com/eriksencosta/money/blob/enum-percentage-s...</a><p>It is a (quick) spike solution, but I've implemented the currency codes as enums and added support for 20.percent.<p>Not so sure about supporting 50.btc and 25.3.usd. I need to check if doing so would affect code completion. | null | null | 41,777,794 | 41,776,878 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,387 | comment | kshacker | 2024-10-11T05:14:40 | null | Imagine if you could have one human operator able to go anywhere in the city for every 50 active cars ! Of course you can scale the number up and down based on actual needs. Kinda like Tesla AAA. Overhead will be less than having a driver per car and could be reasonable. | null | null | 41,805,817 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,388 | story | joveian | 2024-10-11T05:15:02 | Microtypography, Designing the new Collins dictionaries (2005) | null | https://www.typotheque.com/articles/microtypography-designing-the-new-collins-dictionaries | 1 | null | 41,806,388 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,389 | comment | kcrwfrd_ | 2024-10-11T05:15:02 | null | Astro is pretty nice if editing content in markdown checked into the repo works for you. | null | null | 41,806,265 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,390 | story | animal_spirits | 2024-10-11T05:15:13 | iOS 18's Messages via Satellite Feature Is Magic | null | https://tidbits.com/2024/10/10/ios-18s-messages-via-satellite-feature-is-magic/ | 1 | null | 41,806,390 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,806,391 | comment | lazide | 2024-10-11T05:15:13 | null | That is not what the prior comment I was addressing said. Maybe implied, but that’s different. | null | null | 41,798,448 | 41,780,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,392 | comment | nonrandomstring | 2024-10-11T05:15:18 | null | New to me as well. Awesome density of well formulated common-sense
ideas and references. Adding this to my arsenal in defence of humanity
alongside Gall's Systemantics, Demings 14 points and
Forrester/Meadows. Can we ever stop the cult of making insane machines
and cruel systems - while believing we're "making the world a better
place" - even when science tells us we're wrong? | null | null | 41,800,036 | 41,800,036 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,393 | comment | dieselgate | 2024-10-11T05:16:02 | null | The article mentions that under hypotheses. Not sure if sibling comment is being tongue in cheek but the article mentions menageries specifically | null | null | 41,805,409 | 41,757,398 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,394 | comment | an_guy | 2024-10-11T05:16:21 | null | When gov insist on a certain position, just to track back to conclusions of conspiracy theories, it does raise questions about where else they were wrong or lying.<p>> This is totally natural way of how science works, and saying that this undermines public trust of science is actually a point in support of GP, namely, the American public has poor understanding of how science works, due to poor education.<p>So what exactly would an educated person do if they were led to believe something based on false premises which affected their life?<p>Are they not supposed to question the authority who makes decision based on such information?
Or question the source that provides such information consistently?
Or just ignore it because it doesn't aligns with their political view?<p>Or are they supposed to just shut up and accept it because... SCIENCE(holy text)? | null | null | 41,801,953 | 41,801,271 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,395 | comment | adr1an | 2024-10-11T05:16:30 | null | "Think Like a Computer Scientist", right after an introductory course where I learned to program (only to discover that for-loops were done by myself when I was a teen and didn't even know about it, writing macros to level up skills in Ultima Online RPG.) | null | null | 41,756,432 | 41,756,432 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,396 | comment | qingcharles | 2024-10-11T05:16:58 | null | Some of the Tesla GPUs are almost at this price per unit on eBay now. I've seen them go for under $15 online.<p>Here's one for ~$18 inc shipping with 6GB DDR5:<p><a href="https://www.ebay.com/itm/Nvidia-Tesla-K20X-6GB-90Y2351-C7S15A-Dell-GJD61-GPU-1yr-Warranty-Fast-Ship/156086508249" rel="nofollow">https://www.ebay.com/itm/Nvidia-Tesla-K20X-6GB-90Y2351-C7S15...</a> | null | null | 41,805,536 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,397 | comment | eesmith | 2024-10-11T05:17:00 | null | It's literally an xkcd, #882 <a href="https://xkcd.com/882/" rel="nofollow">https://xkcd.com/882/</a><p>There's a large literature of people looking for non-randomness in pi, and failing.<p>If you try 50,000 different tests, with a z-score of 3.29 then 0.1% - 50 of them - will give false positives. | null | null | 41,806,269 | 41,805,941 | null | null | null | null |
41,806,398 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T05:17:03 | null | null | null | null | 41,805,391 | 41,805,391 | null | null | true | null |
41,806,399 | comment | solardev | 2024-10-11T05:17:08 | null | The guy leading the commercial and nonprofit WordPress orgs (Matt) went on a crusade against one particular company (WPEngine) that he's accusing of not sufficiently contributing back to the ecosystem. He demanded they pay a lot of money to his for-profit company, and when they refused, he started calling them out in conferences and across the internet, then banned them from much of the WP ecosystem. They're now suing him.<p>The whole thing is a lot of popcorn and sadness, and it's pretty scary for the WP ecosystem (which had been relatively stable and reliable for decades). Suddenly every company is wondering if they're next in Matt's crosshairs, WPEngine customers don't know what to do, a bunch of Automattic employees quit, and the community itself is divided about who's in the right (if either of them) and it's been a whole WTF journey for everyone watching from the outside.<p>Just read some of the Wordpress stories from the last few weeks if you really want to see the play by play. | null | null | 41,806,338 | 41,806,338 | null | null | null | null |
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